Forensic Astronomer Solves Fine Arts Puzzles
Astrophysicist Don Olson breaks down the barriers between science and art by analyzing literature and paintings from the past
- By Jennifer Drapkin and Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
The case piqued Olson's interest. After reading survivors' accounts, researching weather conditions and analyzing astronomical data at the time of the attack, Olson concluded that the submarine had surfaced just when the Indianapolis was in the glittering path of the Moon's reflection, allowing the Japanese to see it silhouetted from ten miles away but obscuring the submarine from the Americans' view. And once it was spotted, "the ship was doomed," he says.
In addition to puzzles in history, literature and art, Olson also likes photographic puzzles, such as the one he posed to students in an Astronomy in Art History and Literature course he taught at Texas State: When did Ansel Adams capture his celebrated Yosemite National Park image Moon and Half Dome? Although Adams kept careful technical records—noting shutter speeds, f-stops, lenses and film—he rarely dated his negatives, to the frustration of art historians. In the case of Moon and Half Dome, Adams noted only that he had taken it in 1960.
After a field trip to view Yosemite's cliffs and using clues from the photograph—the amount of snow on the ground, the phase of the Moon and the depth of the shadows on the granite dome—Olson and his students concluded that the photograph had been taken at 4:14 p.m. on December 28, 1960. And since they also determined that the Moon and Sun would be in nearly identical places at 4:05 p.m. on December 13, 1994, dozens of Adams fans and even a couple of the photographer's relatives, including his daughter-in-law and grandson, went to the park on that day to shoot their own versions of the iconic photograph.
Olson and another group of students took on Adams' Autumn Moon, a panorama of Yosemite Valley that had been dated in various books to either 1944 or 1948. A series of photographs of the valley taken by a park ranger in 2004 helped them pinpoint where Adams likely took the picture, while weather records and the angle of the Moon helped narrow down the day. Shadows in a color photograph of the scene that Adams took two and a half minutes before he made the black-and-white exposure (based on the position of the Moon) gave clues to the Sun's location and the time of the shot. Olson determined that it had been taken at 7:03 p.m. on September 15, 1948.
He was then able to predict when the light and seasonal conditions would be virtually identical, and he and hundreds of Adams fans ventured to the spot at the appointed time. At 6:52 p.m. on September 15, 2005, Olson's colleague Doescher snapped a photograph that looks eerily similar to Adams' masterpiece. "In a project like this, the journey is its own reward," says Olson. "We not only got to walk in Adams' footsteps, we got to understand the circumstances under which he took the photograph. And the truth is, I think he was prepared. I think he knew that moment in nature was coming."
A starry sky in a work of art often catches Olson's eye—he is an astronomer, after all—and starts him thinking about how he might identify the stars and just when they were captured. "He brings the power of the stars to bear upon our understanding," says art historian Paul Tucker of the University of Massachusetts at Boston. Tucker teaches Olson's work in his class because "pinpointing the time period or a particular moment can have real bearing on the meaning of a picture."
Olson has tackled three van Gogh paintings, including White House at Night, one of more than 70 that van Gogh created in Auvers-sur-Oise in the weeks before he committed suicide, on July 29, 1890. (He hasn't published any findings on van Gogh's Starry Night, saying it's "not simple" to identify the stars in the painting.) When Olson and several of his students traveled to the town, about 20 miles outside Paris, they discovered that the house identified in most guidebooks as the one in the painting didn't have the right number of windows and faced the wrong direction. Once they found the right house—after walking every street in town—it was relatively easy to deduce from celestial calculations and weather reports that the star in the White House painting was actually the planet Venus as it appeared above the house near sunset on June 16, 1890.
Olson delved into Munch's best-known work, The Scream, in 1995. About the time Munch painted it, in 1893, the artist wrote himself a note—which Olson read with the help of Norwegian dictionaries—about a walk he had taken at sunset years earlier, on which "a flaming sword of blood slashed open the vault of heaven—the atmosphere turned to blood—with glaring tongues of fire...and truly I heard a great scream."
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Related topics: Arts Astronomers Astronomy Solar System
Additional Sources
"High Tides and The Canterbury Tales," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, April 2000.
"The Tide at Tarawa," Donald W. Olson, Sky & Telescope, November 1987.
"Identifying the 'Star' in a Long-Lost van Gogh," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, April 2001.
"The Stars of Hamlet," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, November 1998.
"When the Sky Ran Red," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, February 2004.
"Reflections on Edvard Munch's Girls on the Pier," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, May 2006.
"Dating Ansel Adams's Moon and Half Dome," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, December 1994.
"Ansel Adams and an 'Autumn Moon'," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, October 2005.
"Caesar's Invasion of Britain," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, August 2008.
" 'Ill Met by Moonlight': The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis," Donald W. Olson et al., Sky & Telescope, July 2002.









Comments (3)
I have read the article "Celestial Sleuth" describing Dr. Dolson's forensic astronomy and my interest is peaked in other areas. I realize it is summer and Dr. Dolson is on break but I question if knowing a natal chart where the moon and sun are positioned can forescast a life path incorporating the forensic astronomy in regards to leaders who were assassinated like Mohandas Gandhi. Can one trace Gandhi's natal chart plus the forensic astronomy and gain new insights to this time of history.
Mary
Posted by Mary Greville on July 28,2009 | 01:50 PM
No astronomers or astrophysicists in my family, but my husband does keep track of our birthdays on the Asian lunar calendar and matches those to the dates they fall on the Gregorian calendar used in the West. When my nephew approached his 19th birthday, we noticed that his lunar birthday once again coincided with his Gregorian birthday. On extrapolating the lunar birthdays for other family members, it was confirmed that this 19-year coincidence is universal for all dates. In rephotographing Adams' "Autumn Moon," the date that Olsen determined the moon would match when Ansel Adams originally made his shot on Sept. 15, 1948 turns out to be 57 years later on Sept. 15, 2005. 57 years is a multiple (3x) of 19 years. So it was curious to me that Dr. Olsen made all his astronomical measurements to determine when the moon would again be in the same exact location shown in other Ansel Adams photos and missed this "magic" of the 19-year coincidence that we found by simple observation. In the case of his work on "Moon and Half Dome," instead of a near coincidence on Dec. 13, 1994, one wonders if Dr. Olsen would have achieved an even closer match had he been in Yosemite on Dec. 28, 1998 (exactly 2 x 19 years from Adams' Dec. 28, 1960).
Posted by Liz Chin on April 22,2009 | 12:17 AM
Very interesting article by Dr. Olsen. His post period photographs were both beautiful and precise as well. As regards E. Munch's, "Girls on Pier" I have often wandered why the moon did not appear in the reflection. Now I know. Now if I only knew why Edward painted the reflection of the house on left of the large tree with the roof in an incorrect alignment, large section on the left of the reflection rather than on the right as it should be, I would be pleased. I have never heard anyone address this matter. Maybe it is just artistic license. Bernard McIntyre, AR.
Posted by Bernard McIntyre on March 27,2009 | 06:17 PM